Vegetation of Europe: hierarchical floristic classification system of vascular plant, bryophyte, lichen, and algal communities

AimsVegetation classification consistent with the Braun-Blanquet approach is widely used in Europe for applied vegetation science, conservation planning and land management. During the long history of syntaxonomy, many concepts and names of vegetation units have been proposed, but there has been no...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Applied Vegetation Science
Main Authors: Mucina, Ladislav, Bueltmann, Helga, Dierssen, Klaus, Theurillat, Jean-Paul, Raus, Thomas, Carni, Andraz, Sumberova, Katerina, Willner, Wolfgang, Dengler, Juergen, Garcia, Rosario Gavilan, Chytry, Milan, Hajek, Michal, Di Pietro, Romeo, Iakushenko, Dmytro, Pallas, Jens, Daniels, Fred J. A., Bergmeier, Erwin, Santos Guerra, Arnoldo, Ermakov, Nikolai, Valachovic, Milan, Schaminee, Joop H. J., Lysenko, Tatiana, Didukh, Yakiv P., Pignatti, Sandro, Rodwell, John S., Capelo, Jorge, Weber, Heinrich E., Solomeshch, Ayzik, Dimopoulos, Panayotis, Aguiar, Carlos, Hennekens, Stephan M., Tichy, Lubomir
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Wiley-blackwell 2016
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Online Access:https://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gro-2/39045
https://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gs-1/14207
https://doi.org/10.1111/avsc.12257
Description
Summary:AimsVegetation classification consistent with the Braun-Blanquet approach is widely used in Europe for applied vegetation science, conservation planning and land management. During the long history of syntaxonomy, many concepts and names of vegetation units have been proposed, but there has been no single classification system integrating these units. Here we (1) present a comprehensive, hierarchical, syntaxonomic system of alliances, orders and classes of Braun-Blanquet syntaxonomy for vascular plant, bryophyte and lichen, and algal communities of Europe; (2) briefly characterize in ecological and geographic terms accepted syntaxonomic concepts; (3) link available synonyms to these accepted concepts; and (4) provide a list of diagnostic species for all classes. LocationEuropean mainland, Greenland, Arctic archipelagos (including Iceland, Svalbard, Novaya Zemlya), Canary Islands, Madeira, Azores, Caucasus, Cyprus. MethodsWe evaluated approximately 10000 bibliographic sources to create a comprehensive list of previously proposed syntaxonomic units. These units were evaluated by experts for their floristic and ecological distinctness, clarity of geographic distribution and compliance with the nomenclature code. Accepted units were compiled into three systems of classes, orders and alliances (EuroVegChecklist, EVC) for communities dominated by vascular plants (EVC1), bryophytes and lichens (EVC2) and algae (EVC3). ResultsEVC1 includes 109 classes, 300 orders and 1108 alliances; EVC2 includes 27 classes, 53 orders and 137 alliances, and EVC3 includes 13 classes, 24 orders and 53 alliances. In total 13448 taxa were assigned as indicator species to classes of EVC1, 2087 to classes of EVC2 and 368 to classes of EVC3. Accepted syntaxonomic concepts are summarized in a series of appendices, and detailed information on each is accessible through the software tool EuroVegBrowser. ConclusionsThis paper features the first comprehensive and critical account of European syntaxa and synthesizes more than 100yr of classification ...